Sunday, January 30, 2005

NAZIS ON THE COUCH

Nazis on the couch
Dr. Leon Goldensohn may be the psychiatrist with the world's biggest secret: What were those Nazis thinking? His new book has the incredible answers. In 1946, Dr. Leon Goldensohn, a Jewish psychiatrist from Newark, N.J., spent six months conducting lengthy interviews with dozens of Nazis during the Nuremberg trials. Unfortunately, he died before he could write a book about the experience. But now, nearly 60 years after the trials, thanks to his brother, Goldensohn's copious and detailed notes are the basis of a new tome, Nuremberg Interviews.

"I tried to treat this book as a piece of unvarnished history from the moment I started collecting the material," Eli Goldensohn, Leon's brother, told the Forward. "There were no defendants, no witnesses who were not strongly questioned [by my brother] about the treatment of the Jews and about the Holocaust. This is one of the major areas he pushed to explore. I'm very proud of that."

Leon Goldensohn served as psychiatrist for the U.S. Army's 63rd Division in France and Germany during the war. After the war he was stationed at Nuremberg Prison and assigned the job of monitoring the mental health of dozens of Nazis who were either charged with carrying out the genocide of the Jews or were witnesses in the war crimes trials. The group included Rudolf Hoess, the Auschwitz commandant; Hermann Goering, commander of the German air force; Joachim von Ribbentrop, the foreign minister, and Julius Streicher, editor of the antisemitic journal Der Sturmer. Readers are not informed of why Goldensohn, who was 34 at the time, was chosen to look after these Nazis. He replaced another psychiatrist about a month after the trials began, and spent a little more than six months in the first half of 1946 visiting the prisoners nearly every day.

The psychiatrist's assignment was to observe the men, not treat them, and there are few interpretations of the comments made in the interviews. But the interviews themselves are revealing. When Hoess talked candidly about sending an estimated 2.5 million people to their deaths in the gas chambers of Auschwitz, Goldensohn inquired as to whether it troubled him to kill children the same age as his own kids with his wife and children living there at the concentration camp. Hoess responded with a line that leaves readers shaking their heads: "I didn't personally murder anybody. I was just the director of the extermination program ...."

Another stunning moment in the book occurs when Goering, who declared that "nobody knows the real Goering," informed the psychiatrist that the genocide carried out by the Third Reich was at odds with his personal "chivalric code." The air force commander told Goldensohn: "I revere women, and I think it unsportsmanlike to kill children."

Moreover, the war criminals who were close to the Fuhrer had a desire, it seems, to have their sense of what Hitler was all about become part of the historical record; accordingly, they opened up, to varying degrees, to Goldensohn, who became a sort of medium for the passing on of the information. Hans Frank, Hitler's personal lawyer, spoke of the dictator's abnormal sexual needs. Frank was convinced that Hitler turned to cruelty and sadism as a substitute for the love of a woman. Goldensohn noted that Ribbentrop, a difficult man to get to know, was engaged in a calculated effort to help build the myth of Hitler's magnetism.

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